So Supernatural - REVISITING: The Gary Indiana Demon House
Episode Date: July 4, 2025In 2011, the Ammons family moved into a new home in Gary, Indiana — but it wasn’t exactly vacant when they arrived. It was said to be haunted by hundreds of spirits that led to wild paranormal phe...nomena — like levitation, poltergeist activity, and demonic possession. And it wasn’t just the Ammons who witnessed this activity firsthand — nurses, doctors, child service workers, and police officers experienced it too…For a full list of sources, please visit: sosupernaturalpodcast.com/revisiting-the-gary-indiana-demon-houseSo Supernatural is an audiochuck and Crime House production. Find us on social!Instagram: @sosupernatualpodTwitter: @_sosupernaturalFacebook: /sosupernaturalpod
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Hey y'all, technically we're off this week.
Yes, technically.
But we wanted to use this week to revisit one of our favorite and honestly creepiest
episodes ever.
The Gary Indiana Demon House.
I honestly still get chills just thinking about it.
Same, and I remember how in the original intro,
Ashley talked about the movie The Exorcist
and how the whole thing felt like really possible
that this was actually happening.
Basically, since the dawn of time,
people have spoken about demonic possession,
calling a priest to exorcise some malevolent spirit.
And it always seems to be in a young woman or a kid,
which to me makes it that much scarier.
But the creepiest thing is that this type of thing is still happening.
In 2011, the Ahmans family claimed that their one-story house wasn't just regular haunted,
it was demonic possession haunted.
Like kids levitating out of their beds during sleepovers haunted.
People were even getting tossed across the room by unknown forces, and social workers
who allegedly saw the Amun's son climb up a wall.
And for nearly a year, Latoya Amun's claimed that she and her family were mentally and
physically attacked by demons.
And when no one, no one believed her, this mother did the unthinkable to save her children.
She had to get not one, not two, but three major exorcisms.
So whether you missed this one the first time around, or you're brave enough to relive the story of the Gary, Indiana Demon House, I'm Rasha Pecorero.
And I'm Yvette Gentile.
Welcome back to So Supernatural. So it's November 2011 and all Latoya Alens wants to do is just relax like every other
mother.
She's a single mom around her 30s with three kids, a 12-year-old daughter who we're going
to call Casey, a 9-year-old son who we'll call Jackson, and a 7-year-old son who we're
going to call Noah.
And just to be clear, these are fake names.
The papers didn't report the kids' names at the time of the incident,
so to protect their privacy,
we wanna do exactly the same thing.
LaToya and the kids live with her mother, Rosa Campbell.
All five of them have just spent the last few days
moving into a new rental house
at 3860 Carolina Street in Gary, Indiana,
which isn't too far from where Ashley
and the rest of
the team at AudioChuck is.
That's right.
And look, we all know that moving is exhausting.
I know.
But moving with three kids, I can't even imagine.
I only have one kid, so I don't even know what she was going through.
I don't have none and I'm already tired.
So I'm tired just thinking about it.
So the only thing LaToya can think about at the end of the day is she wants some me time.
But of course, there's always something else to do.
New house, new problems, am I right?
So for most people, that means maybe the water pressure is too low or the front door squeaks,
things that, you know, can be annoying but manageable.
But in LaToya's new place, the issues are a little bit weirder than that.
Like when the family tries to hang out on their new screened-in porch,
they keep getting swarmed by these big black flies. Ew.
TAYLOR Yeah, you know me and flies. Like, I can't stand flies. My little Chihuahua can't stand flies.
It's terrifying to fly. So I would be like, where the hell are all these coming from? Totally.
And Rosa, LaToya's mother, keeps swearing
she can hear footsteps in the basement.
But when she goes to investigate,
she doesn't see anything unusual.
So over time, the incidents start getting
more frequent and more strange.
One night, Rosa wakes up and sees
the shadowy figure of a man pacing around the house.
Now, of course, Rosa's first instinct is that they're being robbed.
But when she gets up to confront the burglar, she can't find him.
She looks all over the house, but whoever the shadowy man is, he's nowhere to be found.
But the next morning, Rosa finds a large, muddy boot print in the damn house.
It's way too big to come from any of the family's shoes, so then of course she starts
to think maybe a burglar did break into the house last night, but he escaped before she
could find him.
Except the weird thing was, what kind of burglar doesn't steal anything?
I mean, noises and shadowy figures are one thing, but they pale in comparison to what
happens next.
Because five months after the almonds move in, whatever it is in the house is starting
to get physical.
Like that scares the bejesus out of me.
Me too.
It's 2 a.m. on March 10, 2012, and the Ammons have had a long day.
After a loved one died that morning, their house has become a hub for friends and family who've been mourning their loss long into the night.
LaToya and her mother Rosa and some other adult friends are in the living room talking
while the kids are winding are in the living room talking
while the kids are winding down in the bedrooms with their cousins.
The adults are finally starting to call it a night themselves when all of a sudden they
hear shouting coming from Rosa's bedroom.
Rosa and LaToya rush to the room to find LaToya's 12-year-old daughter Casey completely unconscious
and floating a foot above the bed.
Oh, hell no.
I would be out of that house so fast, like, gone. Bye. See ya.
Bye, Felicia.
But we know that Latoya is a devout Christian, so her first instinct is to ask God for help. So all the mourners gather in
Rose's room, they're reciting hymns and praying as if their lives depended on it.
Which honestly, Casey's might. And miraculously, it works. Slowly but surely, Casey lures back
onto the bed, she blinks her eyes open, and as she looks around at
all the concerned faces, she asks, what just happened?
She doesn't remember a thing.
Can you even imagine?
No.
Yeah, after the levitation incident, the cat, or I guess the poltergeist, is out of the
bag.
Because this is the first of a whole bunch of possession
incidents for the Ammons family.
And whatever is haunting the house is getting much, much more physical and more violent.
At one point, it throws little 9-year-old Jackson across the room.
Casey has incidents where it feels like invisible hands are holding her down and choking her.
And Latoya keeps finding 7-year-old Noah hiding in a closet, talking to someone who isn't
actually there.
Latoya doesn't escape the strange attacks either.
She wakes up some nights feeling feverish and lightheaded.
It's like she's not in control of her body, like some entity is actually possessing her. Okay, I think it's time to call somebody,
a pastor, a rabbi, Ghostbusters.
I mean, y'all, these people need help.
Yes, that's exactly what Latoya's thinking.
But when she asks around,
it feels like nobody wants to get involved.
So Latoya calls church after church,
but most of them dismiss her.
Either they think she's lying
or they simply don't want anything to do
with her haunted house.
LaToya is at her wit's end when finally
someone recommends two psychics to her.
This so reminds me of something that mom would do,
right, Yvette?
Totally, totally.
Yeah.
But by this time, several months have passed
and she's moved in, so it's early spring 2012
when LaToya finally gets these two psychics to come see the house.
She's hoping there are rules to this thing, some way to control it.
Like if it's an angry spirit, maybe there's a way to cast that spirit out or at least
cleanse the house.
Even if she could live alongside it, like a particularly spooky roommate, she'd be
happy. Oh no.
I know.
I know.
She's just at her wits end basically.
So she leads the psychics through the house room to room.
They aren't giving much away, but it's clear they're sensing something is very,
very wrong.
Because before LaToya even finishes the tour, they take her outside and they tell her that
she needs to leave
now. Because she's not just dealing with one spooky entity, the house is infested with
over 200 demons.
All I can say is, oh hell no. Like one demon, two demon, now you're telling me 200 demons?
I'm already gone. Like you know, never to return.
Never, never, never, never to return.
Because what's the first thing you scream at,
at the TV when watching a horror film?
Like you're literally just telling them,
move, get out of the way, leave, right?
All the time.
But for LaToya, it's not that simple.
She just spent all of her money getting into this home. She doesn't have
the cash to just up and leave and break her lease. So, the psychics give her some advice.
Try setting up an altar in the basement and bless the house. That very night, Latoya and
Rosa followed these exact instructions. They set up a table in the basement and cover it
with a white sheet and then place statues
of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph on it.
She wasn't playing.
They burned sage and waved it through the house, making signs of the cross with the
smoke.
Around the same time, a church finally gets back to Latoya with a bit of advice on how
to handle the situation.
So she follows their directions too. Latoya deep cleans the house
and draws a cross in olive oil on all the doors and windows. She also anoints her children's
hands and feet with oil. But all of this, the oil, the sage, the altar, they're not
enough. In fact, it seems like all they've managed to do is piss off whatever is in the
house. So, Latoya changes her course of action on April 19, 2012. She figures if the church can't help
her, maybe the family doctor can. Latoya believes this is more than a mental illness, but she's
desperate for someone to do something. So, a doctor probably seems like the next logical solution.
And she gets to show them first-hand what they've been dealing with.
Because right there in his office, Latoya's son Noah starts exhibiting strange behaviors.
He starts thrashing and screaming and speaking in demonic voices and cursing.
The doctor is terrified.
It's like nothing he's ever seen before.
But his world is logic and reason, not spirituality.
So he immediately believes the issue here is psychiatric,
not supernatural.
I do not agree.
I do not either.
But he notes that the whole family has delusions of ghosts in the home
and are suffering from hallucinations. Then he does what he believes is best for Noah.
He calls an ambulance. Latoya rides with Noah to the local hospital, terrified that her
son is sick, only she's met in the ICU by the police and a caseworker from the Department of
Child Services. I mean, Latoya's devastated. She's only doing what she
believed would protect her children. Now her son is hospitalized and Child
Services is involved. And when she tries to explain about the demons, it feels
like no one will listen to her. In fact, it's only making things worse.
Then something happens in the hospital that nobody can explain.
Something so outrageous that it turns the caseworker and a police officer into true to true believers.
It's 2012 and Latoya Almond is having the worst week, maybe even worst year of her life.
Not only are demons attacking her family, but the authorities won't believe her.
Now her son's in the hospital being examined by doctors and child services.
Just picture this hospital room.
I mean, it's utter chaos.
Latoya, Rosa, and all three kids are there.
Noah is screaming, he's growling, he's speaking in strange voices, and convulsing.
And he's doing all of this in front of the caseworkers, the nurses, and the police.
It takes five people to hold him down in the hospital bed.
And worst of all, nobody can agree on what his problem is,
whether it's medical, mental, or spiritual.
But it's clear to everyone that something is very wrong.
The caseworker assigned to the Ahmonds family
is named Valerie Washington.
So let's imagine you're Valerie for a second.
You're coming into this with reports
of kids acting strangely.
With your background, you're pretty primed to believe
that they're acting out because of something
going on at home.
Now, I'm sure that she's seen her fair share
of abuse,
neglect, hunger, even mental illness.
But the longer she spends with the Ahmonds family
in the hospital, the more she starts to believe
something else is going on here.
Valerie watches as Noah starts growling
and baring his teeth.
His eyes roll back in his head
and before anyone can make a move,
he springs at his brother Jackson,
wrapping his hands around the older boy's throat.
Noah's only seven years old,
but he's showing such strength
that Jackson can't even stop him.
It takes several adults to pull Noah off of his brother.
Now that's not even what disturbs Valerie the most.
Later that night, she interviews the boys with their grandmother Rosa and a nurse in the room.
As Valerie is asking questions Noah begins staring down Jackson and growling at him again.
Then his voice drops into a strange deep register and he starts rasping threats saying quote, it's time to die. But then something comes over
Jackson. He turns on Rosa and starts headbutting his grandmother in the
stomach. Next the creepiest most inexplicable thing happens right in
front of Valerie's eyes. Rosa grabs Jackson's hands to pray with him but
instead of joining her he reportedly looks up at Valerie
on the nurse with a creepy grin on his face.
He stands up, he walks slowly backwards to the wall
and then walks straight up it.
Backwards, are you listening to the words
that are coming out of my mouth?
He walked backwards all the way up to the ceiling.
Mm-hmm.
Valerie is so freaked out that she takes off running with the nurse hot on her heels.
She cannot explain what she just saw, but she feels confident there's something evil fixating on the Ammons family.
But here's the thing. It's her job to protect those children, right? So the next day, she tells Latoya what she's
decided. To keep the kids safe, Child Services is taking
emergency custody and moving her three kids to a foster home.
Wow. Now, there's a bit of a difference between what Valerie
Washington said she saw, and what her notes say.
I bet there were. How could she explain that on paper?
Yeah, exactly. I know. But the thing is, Valerie is a caseworker. She deals in family services,
right? Right.
She is a logical woman. I mean, she spent years trying to get to the bottom of child welfare cases, which in her mind always have
a reasonable explanation.
She's just gone through something utterly terrifying, unlike anything she's ever experienced.
So she's dealing with it the only way she knows how, by finding a rational explanation.
So one idea that she writes down is that perhaps all of this is stemming from LaToya herself,
that the mother, LaToya, has some kind of mental illness or delusion that's making
her think the house is haunted.
Wanting to please their mother, the children, could be pretending to be possessed and attacked
by spirits. So Valerie tells
Latoya the kids will undergo psychiatric evaluations and in a few weeks, child services will come
to her the house. And if everything goes well, her children will be returned to her.
So of course, Latoya is naturally distraught. Who wouldn't be? She's done everything
she can to protect her kids, and now the state is investigating
whether she's a fit mother?
She knows her only chance to get her kids back is to prove to the authorities that the
demons tormenting her family are real.
Now around this time, LaToya meets a Catholic priest named Father Maginot who blesses the
house.
LaToya is relieved when she finds that Maginot believes her.
But that relief quickly turns to terror because the father is so disturbed by the house, he
advises LaToya and Rosa to stay with the relative.
It's too dangerous for them to continue living there.
I mean, that's what I was saying in the beginning.
Like, hello, finally someone is telling them to get the heck up out of that house.
And thankfully, this time, they actually listen.
They stay out of the house for most of the following week.
But eventually, they have to go back for that child services visit.
That day, Latoya and Rosa meet Valerie and three police officers outside the house on Carolina Street.
Latoya herself is even too scared to go inside, so Rosa takes the group into the house.
But from the moment they step inside, their equipment starts immediately malfunctioning.
Two of the cops are using voice recorders.
Only one of the voice recorders dies almost as soon as they step foot in the house, despite
being fully charged.
The other recorder does something totally different.
When the police officer listens back to it later that day, he hears an unknown voice
whisper, hey, on the recording.
Another officer is taking photos of the screened-in front porch where he notices something very strange.
A cloudy white smudge appears in the upper right-hand corner of the image.
When it's enlarged later, it shows the clear outline of a floating human figure on the porch.
All I can say is, get out, get out, get out.
There's a movie called Get Out, and I'm sure there's a scene like that from that movie,
even though I couldn't watch it
because I was too much of a scaredy-cat.
But anyway, on another police visit about two weeks later,
things start to get kind of sticky.
This time, Latoya and Rosa are joined by Father Magino
and several police officers.
Valerie is too scared to go back in the house,
so a different case worker named Samantha
joins the expedition.
It only takes minutes for people to start fleeing the house.
Samantha's pinky finger starts to tingle as if something is wrong with the nerve in
her finger.
Actually, she's so convinced her finger is broken that she ends up having a complete
panic attack and she also has to leave.
Then Latoya complains of a pain in her head and shoulder and she leaves. The remaining cops notice
there's something oily dripping from the Venetian blinds in the living room. Father Maginot declares
that this is obviously demonic. And while he's dabbled in demon hunting before, he's never seen such clear evidence
of an evil presence.
Well, thank God for Father Maginot because now somebody believes her.
Seriously.
The cops are a little less sure which is to be expected.
So they conduct an experiment.
They completely clean off the Venetian blinds and then seal off the living
room. For 25 minutes, no one goes in and no one comes out. And what do you think happens when they
open the door? Let me guess, the blinds are oily again? Bingo! Demon juice all over them.
Okay, so both the police and child services have seen a lot of spooky things in the Ammons
house at this point.
One police officer walks away fully believing there's something evil in the house.
And remember, the caseworker, Valerie Washington, saw Jackson walk up a wall, like literally
saw him walk up a wall.
And yet, it's still not enough to convince the state.
I mean, I imagine it would take a lot. So they inform LaToya they're keeping her kids.
That is so heartbreaking. I can't even imagine what she was going through.
But as a mom, she's not going to stop fighting for her children. She realizes if she wants to get her kids back
and get her house cleansed of spirits,
she needs to see Father Maginot again.
He says he thinks he can still help her,
but he's got a new theory now.
Father Maginot doesn't believe
the problem lies with the house.
He thinks it's with LaToya.
Essentially, the demons aren't haunting a place, but a person.
And listen, all the demonic attacks didn't stop once LaToya left her place.
Remember, LaToya's children kept acting like they were possessed even in the hospital.
So it's not the cottage on Carolina Street he needs to exercise.
He says it's LaToya herself.
Father Majinah goes and he presents LaToya's story to his bishop.
Now in the 21 years that he's been at the diocese,
this bishop has never authorized an exorcism.
But after hearing everything that's happened to Latoya,
he gives his blessing.
And so it seems the entire power of the Catholic Church
stands behind Father Maginot and this exorcism,
at least at the time.
So let's fast forward to June 2012,
about two months since her kids were removed from
the home.
Latoya Ammons is equal parts terrified and hopeful.
She's bound in a chair in Father Maginot's church in Maryville, Indiana, which is just
outside of Gary.
As Father Maginot begins to pray, Latoya starts convulsing in her chair.
Maginot presses a crucifix to her forehead and repeatedly tells the demons he's casting
them out.
But when he draws back, he freezes in surprise.
The little metal Christ figure that decorates his crucifix has disappeared without a trace.
And try as he might, the one exorcism doesn't quite do the trick.
As Latoya comes out of her trance in the chair, Father Maginot informs her that the demons
haunting her have been weakened, but they are far from gone.
They will need to try again.
Over the course of the month, he tries this two more times.
I can't even imagine like this poor woman is going through this, but she's doing what
she has to do because she wants to get rid of this.
Exactly.
Well, the final time seems like the most difficult for Latoya, or the demons hiding inside of
her.
As Father Maginot prays in Latin and recites from the Bible, poor Latoya convulses again,
fighting the straps that are keeping her in that chair.
But still, Father Maginot believes some stubborn demons are refusing to come out.
Finally, just as Father Maginot is about to call it quits, Latoya starts praying aloud,
something she hasn't
done in any of the earlier exorcisms.
And it seems to make a huge difference, because after that, the demons are gone.
Just like that.
For Latoia, this is like the sun breaking through a never-ending thunderstorm.
Not only is she free of demons, so is her house.
As one last precaution, Latoya and Rosa get the resources needed to move away from the
house on Carolina Street. And finally, six months after that fateful day when her son
walked up a wall, she gets her kids back.
Thank goodness.
It's not every day we get to see a happy ending,
especially in what feels like a real-life horror movie.
Well, hang on.
The credits haven't rolled quite yet, Rasha,
because this story reaches the news two years later in 2014.
And that's when people start to doubt
whether there were ever any demons
in the first place.
One of the strangest things about the Ammons' haunting case is how well documented it is.
I mean, every terrifying incident is confirmed by multiple people.
But even with all of this overwhelming evidence,
there are some skeptics out there.
So let's go back through the story step by step
and see if the dark demons tormenting the Ammons family
hold up in the harsh light of day.
Our first stop is, you guessed it, the house on Carolina Street.
So Charles Reed was the landlord at 3860 Carolina Street for 33 years.
And as he told reporters, he's heard every excuse under the sun for late rent, house
problems, I mean, you name it.
But 200 demons?
That's a new one. I mean, you name it, but 200 demons?
That's a new one.
Charles apparently never had ghostly issues in this house, either before or after the
Almonds family lived there, so he was surprised to hear about strange oily liquids seeping
from the walls and unseen forces possessing her children.
At first, he thought he knew where this was coming from. Latoya
was behind on his rent and possibly looking for excuses to delay paying her bills. But
that was only before the Catholic Church got involved. Once Charles heard that they had
approved an exorcism, he was much more willing to believe Latoya.
All of this seems like a whole lot of work
to get a simple grace period on rent.
And I mean, it goes without saying,
this doesn't explain things like the oil
literally seeping from the walls on their own,
or one of LaToya's children walking up a wall.
Based on everything we know,
the demons seem to be attached to LaToya,
not the rental house.
So the landlord's opinion
doesn't hold a ton of weight for me. But a clinical psychologist's opinion? Now that I'm
a little more interested in. So LaToya's kids, Noah, Jackson, and Casey, were in the custody of
child services for about six months. During that time, they were evaluated by specially trained
psychologists to get to the root of their
bizarre behavior. The psychologist who examined the youngest son Noah noted that in normal
conversation he came across as calm and logical. But the second demons were mentioned, all of that
went out the window. Noah would make claims about demons that didn't make any sense, or his stories
would change with every retelling.
The psychologist also noticed
that whenever she asked Noah a question he didn't like,
he'd literally start acting like he was possessed.
He'd growl, he'd roll his eyes back in his head,
just like he did at the hospital.
Like maybe it was sort of a defensive tactic.
As for the other two kids,
the psychologist who examined them noticed similar
behavior. He saw that both kids really did believe something strange was happening in the home.
But that didn't mean that the home was actually haunted by demons.
In fact, both doctors concluded that the three kids weren't really possessed. Instead, they were
acting this way because their mother encouraged it.
The doctor believed Latoya was suffering from a demonic delusion.
Now let's just break that down for a second.
Yes, Latoya was a devout Christian, and yes, some deeply religious people are primed to
believe in things like demons.
So perhaps something convinced Latoya
there were demons in the house
and her children followed suit.
But what that doesn't account for
is Latoya's own psychological evaluation.
Latoya was so confident she was telling the truth
that she released her own psych records to the newspaper.
That's because when Latoya was evaluated, the doctor concluded
she was not suffering from psychosis or any other disorder. After declaring Latoya was
a stable guardian for her children, the Department of Child Services set several parameters for
her to regain custody of her children. The family needed to avoid talking about demons and possessions
and to go to therapy together. I mean, these are all good things.
But the most interesting rule was the final one. Latoya would need to move to a new house.
Hello, what have we been saying all along? I know. And why? Apparently, they felt there was proof that something so supernatural was happening
at the house on Carolina Street. Right there in the official child services case file,
it said, this house was unfit to live in due to paranormal activity.
Hello, that's what we've been saying this entire time.
All along.
So even with all the therapy and searching for mental
or emotional reasons for the almonds problem,
child services still thought the house was haunted.
I mean, it makes so much sense to me and Yvette.
Remember what happened at the hospital?
Jackson slowly walking backwards up the wall with so many witnesses.
You can't unsee that.
No, you cannot unsee that.
Now, some skeptics have argued this isn't as impossible a feat as it sounds.
With the grandmother, Rosa, holding the boy's hand,
she could have been bracing him on his journey up the wall?
No.
Like, what?
There's no way.
She's an elderly woman.
He's an 11-year-old boy.
That is not possible.
There's this little thing we call gravity
that comes into play here.
Plus, there were two trained professionals
that were so terrified of what they saw,
they literally ran out of the room screaming.
We also have to consider that there were people who saw terrifying things when the Ammons family wasn't even there.
Like police captain Charles Austin, he was one of the officers present when they took the photo with the mysterious white figure on the front porch.
Have to remember that.
So let's talk about the photo for a second, because from what I read, it may not be totally credible. And here's the problem.
According to the Indianapolis Star, the photo of the front porch with this
terrifying shadowy white figure was snapped by someone from the Hammond
Police Department, which patrols the town of Hammond, which is right next to
Gary. But on further investigation, the Hammond police chief
claimed that the photo did not come from them.
So we really have no idea where that photo came from.
The figure pictured in it could be real,
it could be a trick of light,
or even Photoshop for all that matters.
But without knowing who snapped the photo, it's impossible to say if it really is a
picture of a demon.
On one hand, it's easy to believe that Latoya Ammons was a single mom dealing with a lot
on her plate and possibly looking for someone or something to blame. But the huge stack of eyewitness accounts
and hard evidence makes me think 100%
that she was truly haunted by demons.
And it looks like in the years since,
things have gone pretty quiet
at the Gary, Indiana demon house.
Landlord Charles Reed rented it out
for several more years with no incident. In 2014, he sold the house to Zach Bagans, you know, the host of the paranormal investigation show Ghost Adventures.
We do know.
And side note, our beautiful mother, Fana Hodel, was on Ghost Adventures on the Black Dahlia House episode in 2015.
I don't know why Zach bought that damn house.
Yeah.
He crazy. in 2015. I don't know why Zach bought that damn house. Yeah.
He also shot a documentary in the house
before tearing it down in 2016.
And afterwards, this is what he told the Indy star,
he saw supernatural things inside that house
that he had never seen before.
And the words that he used,
dark, intelligent, and powerful.
And the house wasn't the only part of this story to receive the Hollywood treatment.
So this year, director Lee Daniels just
released his first ever horror film,
and it's about Latoya Amin's story.
He changes some things, obviously,
like it's not in Gary, Indiana, it's in Pittsburgh.
It's called The Deliverance, but all the things that happened to her and her family are in
this movie.
And I literally had a pillow in front of my face the entire time.
And I was watching it with my husband and Geno's like, just put the pillow down.
I'm like, no, I can't put the pillow down.
Like I can't. The message down. Like, I can't.
The message of the movie is the same as Latoya's story. Basically, nothing can compete with a mother's love,
and she will do anything and everything
to protect her children.
And that's going to hell and back for them, y'all.
And that's going to hell and back for them, y'all. This is So Supernatural, an audio check original produced by Crime House.
You can connect with us on Instagram at So Supernatural Pod and on our website, SoSupernaturalPodcast.com. Join Yvette
and me next Friday for an all-new episode. So what do you think Chuck? Do you
approve?